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ethicssteve.bsky.social
Attorney/ethicist/Exec Dir @ChicagoEthicsBd/dad/mugwump/music/photography/baseball/Flâneur/film+pinot noiriste. Opinions mine unless noted.
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I listened to Salome this afternoon. The music struck me as far too beautiful for this horrid story. I enjoyed every minute. Kudos @metopera.bsky.social and @WFMTClassical here in Chicago for airing it live. I love the Saturday noon Met opera broadcasts.

Reason to love Chicago #333,333,333. Taken on my lunchtime jaunt in River North, Chicago. My iPhone id’s this as Phlox—but it is a tulip methink.

Places des Vosges, September 2024. A most peaceful Parisian portico.

I stand corrected. The Bach encore was not Herr Jesus Christ—it was Kempff’s transcription of the Siciliano from a flute sonata. Glad this isn’t Final Jeopardy! thirdcoastreview.com/2025/05/13/p...

Every human emotion—the vast panoply of them—Shostakovich somewhere in this magisterial work identifies and plumbs it.

Evgeny Kissin is one of the great virtuoso pianists of our lifetime. Fascinating to hear him play Shostakovich; a hitherto unknown (by me) sonata. Wow it was dark—Leningrad 1943. He graced us with 3 encores: Bach’s Ich Ruf Zu, Herr Jesus Christ, and a Chopin scherzo and waltz. Stunning.🎹

To say I’m looking forward to Kissin’s annual Spring appearance in Chicago would understate it. I didn’t know Shostakovich even wrote piano sonatas. But his preludes + fugues are sublime. Dmitri’s “oeuvre” is like an ever-beckoning mountain range.

Fun with new iPhone camera. The flora are exuberant on this gorgeous Spring Chicago Saturday. The roses: at the post-modern McDonald’s at Clark + Ontario. The dogwood: at St. James Cathedral, Huron + Wabash.

Clickbait, but fun just the same. superage.com/seven-cities...

This settles what’s on many a Chicagoan’s mind (even non-Catholics like me). Leo XIV is a Sox fan. I never doubted this. It restores my essential faith in the Essential Order of the Universe. Thomism at work. x.com/josh_frydman...

Happy birthday to old Johannes Brahms. This is my go-to performance of his German Requiem, itself a desert island piece.

Rest in peace dear colleague and neighbor. I was lucky to work with Lori during her years in the Daley Administration; our families were neighbors, 1999-2001. Far too young. My condolences to her family. A talented executive and an outstanding public servant. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lori_He...

This is of the canonic works of Western Art.

So due to a dumb, most improbable accident, I’ve got a new iPhone 16 ProMax. And I’m gonna use its camera! Few things are as voluptuous as a Japanese Crabapple in full flower. Even on an overcast day in Chicago. This one is on the Moody Bible Institute campus.

Photos serendipitously found in my Apple photo archive: Chicago. 22 December 2019. Lots of oranges, oddly.

Ugh. More to fret about. A few things: 1. I read (can’t recall where) of someone, “he died of having lived.” 2. I re-read that red wine is good for you. I’d guess it has hardly any microplastics. 3. Do eggs have microplastics? superage.com/7-foods-and-...

How lovely to be pointed by Spotify to this sublime interpretation of a sublime LvB work. The #4 pc, in G. Mitsuko Uchida is such a gem.

Lovely, not licely! I do like the sound of licely, but can’t figure out how to use it in a sentence. It should be a word! 😜😜

A llcely thing about Chicago is radio station WFMT, 98.7 FM (they have a worldwide app). 40% of my brain’s musical real estate comes thence. Today I heard it’s Wallingford Riegger’s bday. Never heard of him? Me neither until I heard this piece 25 years ago on WFMT. Enjoy! youtu.be/z8XlBLUhBDc?...

Other beautiful views of Millennium Park—on the right day, one of Chicago’s most memorable spots, one of its grand, vast—yet private—spaces. So many languages can be overheard that feels like you’re a tourist in your own town.

Largely the same view, 11 years later. A reflection on the concept of permanence in this world. That was 11 generations of iPhones ago. So this is today.

What a beautiful Spring weekend in Chicago, especially for music. Wunderkind Klaus Mäkelä led a stunning Mahler 3–here saluting the massive percussion section. Emanuel Ax gave LvB’s Eb sonata op. 27 #1 the love it deserves. And Schumann: my favorite lawyer-composer. His C major Fantasy is a gem.

Happy 83 to former Mayor Rich Daley, the first of four for whom I’ve worked. I hope he’s enjoying life to the max.

Happy birthday, Sergei P! A favorite recording. Piano concerto 3 soars.

The Red Army Choir is choice guilty pleasure. I give not a fig for Soviet ideology, but wow can they sing.

Schönheit, indeed. To paraphrase Ben Franklin: “a beautiful planet, if you can keep it.” —Beira Interior, Portugal (Salvaterra do Extremo).

A completely fascinating case before the SCOTUS tomorrow. Part of me thinks the future of our 50-state republic depends on the resolution of questions like these. www.scotusblog.com/case-files/c...

So one late LvB masterwork leads to another: the Diabelli variations. This is genius in action.

The first LP I have of this sonata is Kovacevich’s, when he was Stephen Bishop (~1964). A Seraphim LP. I adore it. This sonata is ever new—and in my LvB pantheon of favorites.

LvB’s A major sonata op. 101: a gem, strange and calming. Kudos to Spotify for having both early and late Stephen (B.) Kovacevich versions. www.tpr.org/arts-culture...

Moses’s first reaction upon encountering the burning bush: 4/20/1446 BC. This version did not make it into the Book of Exodus.

Clear, powerful opinion in the Garcia case from Judge Wilkinson (4th Cir.) His contrasting discussion of Eisenhower is elegant. Reminds me of Justice Frank Murphy’s dissent in Korematsu v. US—another case dealing with a shame on our constitution. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...

After 35 years of understanding only a few words of Luso-Brazilian, this David Byrne compilation still enchants. Especially having recently visited Portugal and heard this mysteriously beautiful language spoken. Even my untrained ear could hear differences between the dialects.

The happiest of Passovers to all who observe.

Taken seconds apart. From the same footprint, same exact spot. Different camera settings, but same human stance, same view. Life is ever complex and beautiful.

So it’s Tom Lehrer’s birthday. Born 1928. His delightful work occupies lots of my 🧠 , for good reason.

Kudos to Spotify for including a good artistic bio of Darrin. Versatile singer, born with a bad ticker, alas.🫀🎶🎤